The
Slovak National Uprising ( , abbreviated SNP) or
1944 Uprising was an armed insurrection organized by the Slovak
resistance movement during
World War II. It was launched on August 29, 1944 from
Banská
Bystrica
in an attempt to oust the collaborationist government of Jozef
Tiso. Although the rebel forces were defeated by
Germany,
guerrilla warfare
continued until the
Soviet Army seized
Slovakia in 1945.
In the post-war period, many political entities attempted to
"hijack" the uprising to their credit.
The communist regime
in Czechoslovakia
presented the Uprising as an event initiated and
governed by communist forces.
Slovak nationalists, on the other hand,
claim that the uprising was a plot against the Slovak nation, as
one of its main objectives was to oust the regime of the puppet
Slovak state and reestablish Czechoslovakia, in which Slovaks were
dominated by
Czechs. In fact, many factions
fought in the uprising, including large rebel units of the
Slovak Army, Slovak
partisans, communist partisans, and
international forces. Given this fractionalization, the Uprising
did not have unambiguous popular support. Yet, the participants and
supporters of the Uprising represented every religion, class,
gender, age, and
anti-Nazi political
fraction of the Slovak nation.
Preliminaries
Edvard Beneš, leader of the
Czechoslovak government in exile in London, had
initiated the preparations for the possible revolt in 1943 when he
made first contacts with the dissident elements of the Slovak Army.
In December 1943, various groups that would be involved with the
uprising—the government in exile, Czechoslovak
democrats and communists and Slovak army—formed
the underground
Slovak National
Council, and signed the so-called
Christmas Treaty, a
joint declaration to recognize Beneš's authority and to recreate
Czechoslovakia after the war. The council was responsible for
creating the preparatory phase of the Uprising.
In March 1944, Slovak army
Lieutenant
Colonel Ján Golian took charge
of the preparations. Conspirators stockpiled money, ammunition and
other supplies in military bases in central and eastern Slovakia.
The rebelling forces called themselves
Czechoslovak Forces of the
Interior and the
First
Czechoslovak Army. Approximately 3,200 Slovak soldiers
deserted and joined partisan groups or the
Soviet Red Army.
In April 1944 Slovak Jews, Rudolf Vrba and Alfred
Wetzler escaped from Auschwitz
and eventually spoke about the horrors in German
death camps.
In summer 1944 partisans intensified their war against German
occupation forces mainly in the mountains of north-central
Slovakia.
In July, Red Army troops in the Soviet Union
and Poland
began to
advance towards Slovakia. By August 1944 the Red Army was at
Krosno
, Poland and within 40 kilometers of the
North-Eastern Slovak border.
Two
heavily armed divisions of the Slovak Army together with the entire
eastern Slovak Air Force
were deliberately relocated to Prešov
in
north-eastern Slovakia in summer 1944 to execute one of two planned
options to begin the uprising. The two options were:
- the
two divisions would start the uprising by coordinating their
capture of Dukla
Pass
(joining Poland and Slovakia through the Carpathian
Mountains) with the arrival of the Soviet Army (1st Ukrainian Front under Marshall Ivan Konev),
or
- respond to insurrectional army leader Ján Golian's orders to
start resistance by immediately confronting any invading German
forces and hold the pass until the Soviet Army could arrive.
Colonel Viliam
Talský was Chief of Staff over the two divisions. He had agreed
in advance with the insurrectional army leadership and the uprising
planning committee of the Slovak National Council to execute either
of these two plans, depending on the circumstances he faced.
On August
27, 1944 in Martin
, a group of
communist partisans under Soviet command in Kiev killed 30 members
of a German military mission en route from Romania
, a country
that had just changed sides to support the Allies. German
troops began to occupy Slovakia the next day to put down the
rebellion. German arrangements for such
occupation were done few weeks later.
At 19:00 hours on August 29, 1944 Slovak
Defence Minister General Ferdinand Čatloš announced on
state radio that Germany had occupied Slovakia. Golian sent the
coded message to all units at 20:00 hours to begin the Uprising.
Instead of adhering to the agreed plan, Colonel Talský gathered the
entire eastern Slovak Air Force on August 30 and abandoned the two
divisions flying to a prearranged landing zone in Poland to join
the Soviet Army. The two divisions, left in chaos and without
leadership, were quickly disarmed on the afternoon of August 30
without a single shot. Consequently, the uprising commenced
prematurely and lost a crucial component of their plan as well as
their two most heavily armed divisions capable of resisting any
German advance.
Forces
Accounts of the exact numbers of combatants vary. At first, the
rebel forces consisted of an estimated 18,000 soldiers. The total
increased to 47,000 after
mobilization
on September 9, 1944, and later to 60,000, plus 18,000 partisans
from over 30 countries. The
Slovak Insurgent Air Force had a
small number of mostly obsolete planes.
In addition to Slovak forces, the combatants included various other
groups from escaped French
POWs to
Soviet partisans and
SOE and
OSS operatives. The Slovak side
had to use mostly
bi-planes and improvised
armored trains to fight against the
better equipped German weapons.
In addition to Soviet aid, United States
B-17 Flying Fortress bombers
landed at Tri
Duby
airfield on October 7, 1944 and brought supplies
and OSS agents. Before returning they embarked 25 Allied
pilots shot down over Slovakia in past few month and also five
French partisans.
Course of the uprising
Uprising begins
Rebels began the uprising on August 29 8:00 p.m. under the command
of Ján Golian.
They entered Banská Bystrica
in the morning of August 30 and made it their
headquarters. German troops disarmed the Eastern Slovak Army
on August 31. Many of the soldiers were sent to camps in Germany
while others escaped and joined the Soviet-controlled partisans or
returned home. On September 5 Ján Golian became the commander of
all the rebel forces in Slovakia and was given the rank of General.
Slovak forces in central Slovakia mobilized 47,000 men. His first
analysis of the situation predicted that insurgents could resist
German attacks for about two weeks.
By September 10 the rebels gained control of large areas of central
and eastern Slovakia. That included two
airfields, and the Soviet Air Force began to fly in
equipment.
Momentum lost

Situation map in first days of Slovak
National Uprising
The
pro-German government of Tiso remained in power in Bratislava
. Germany moved 40,000 SS
soldiers under Gottlob
Berger to suppress the uprising. They detained and
disarmed two Slovak divisions and 20,000 soldiers that had been
supposed to secure the mountain passes to help the Red Army. Beneš
had met with Stalin and Molotov in Moscow in December 1943 to
secure Soviet support for the uprising. However, Stalin and the
STAVKA failed to deliver the needed support
on time to the insurgent army and even blocked Western offers of
military aid as they did only a few weeks earlier in the
Warsaw uprising. Meanwhile, General Koniev
and the Soviet partisan headquarters in Kiev, Ukraine continued to
undermine the Slovak insurgent army by ordering partisan groups
operating in forward positions in Slovakia to conduct operations
and avoid coordination with the Slovak insurgent army. The Soviet
led partisans even demanded and took desperately needed weapons and
munitions from the insurgent Slovak army that were stored for the
uprising. The vast majority of Soviet air drops of weapons over
insurgent-held territory in Eastern and Northern Slovakia were
quickly confiscated by
Soviet
partisans and little ended up in the hands of the much stronger
and better trained Slovak insurrectional army.
On
September 8 the Red Army began an offensive on the Dukla Pass on the
Slovak-Polish
border and
tried to fight through the Carpathian Mountains
to penetrate into Slovakia. This
poorly-planned and late action resulted in tremendous casualties on
both sides and became bogged down for nearly two months.
Beneš, the Soviet partisans and various Slovak factions began to
argue among themselves for operational control. Although he tried
on repeated occasions, General Golian could not bring the sides
together to coordinate their efforts. General
Rudolf Viest flew in and took command on
October 7. Golian became his second-in-command. Viest could not
control the situation when political rivalries resurfaced in the
face of military failure.
The uprising also coincided with the stalling of the Soviet summer
offensive, the failure of the
Warsaw
Uprising, and other troubles on the side of the Western
allies. The Red Army and its Czechoslovakian
allies failed to quickly penetrate the Dukla Pass despite the
fierce fighting between September 8 and October 28; they suffered
85,000 casualties (21 000 dead). The Czechoslovak government in
exile failed to convince western allies to ignore Stalin's
obstruction and send more supplies to the area.
On September 17 two
B-17 Flying
Fortresss flew in the OSS mission of
Lieutenant James Holt-Green.
SOE team of major
John Sehmer followed the next day on its way to Hungary
. Their reports confirmed the suspicions of
Western Allies that the situation of the uprising was
worsening.
Counteroffensive
On September 19 German command replaced SS-Obergruppenführer
Berger, who had been in charge of the
troops fighting the Uprising, with General
Höffle. By that time Germans had 48,000
soldiers; they consisted of eight German divisions, including four
from the
Waffen-SS and one pro-Nazi Slovak
formation.
On October 1 the rebel army was renamed the
1st Czechoslovak Army in
Slovakia, in order to symbolize the beginning of the
Czech-Slovak reunification that would be recognized by the
Allied forces.
A major
German counteroffensive began on October 17–18 when 35,000 German
troops entered the country from Hungary
, which had been under German military occupation
since 19 March 1944. Stalin demanded that his advancing
Second Ukrainian Front led by General Malinovsky be immediately
diverted from Eastern Slovakia to Budapest. The western advance of
Soviet forces came to a screeching halt in late October 1944, as
Stalin's interests focused on Hungary, Austria and Poland before he
was interested in Slovakia or the Czech lands. By the end of
October,
Axis forces (six German
divisions and one pro-Nazi
Slovak unit) had
taken back most of the territory from the insurgents and encircled
the fighting groups. Battles cost at least 10,000 casualties on
both sides.
Insurgents had to evacuate Banská Bystrica on October 27 just prior
to the German takeover. SOE and OSS agents retreated to the
mountains alongside the thousands of others fleeing German advance.
The rebels prepared to change their strategy to that of
guerrilla warfare. On October 28, Viest
sent London a message that said the organized resistance had ended.
On October 30, General Höffle and President
Tiso celebrated in Banská Bystrica and awarded
medals to German soldiers for their part in the suppression of the
uprising (claimed by some to have been done by Tiso as to save the
lives of Slovak soldiers captured by German forces in the uprising,
who were deported to
concentration
camps, and to save three Slovak cities from German
bombardment).
Aftermath
However, partisans together with the remains of the regular forces
continued their efforts in the mountains.
In retaliation,
Einsatzgruppen
executed many Slovaks suspected of aiding the
rebels and destroyed 93 villages for suspicion of collaboration. A later estimate of the
death toll was 5,304 and authorities discovered 211
mass graves that resulted from those atrocities.
The
largest executions occurred in Kremnička (747 killed) and Nemecká
(900 killed).
On
November 3 Germans captured Golian and Viest in Pohronský
Bukovec
; they later interrogated and executed
them.
SOE and OSS teams eventually united and sent a message in which
they requested immediate assistance. Germans surrounded both groups
on December 25 and captured them. Some of the men were summarily
executed.
Germans took the rest to Mauthausen
concentration
camp where they were tortured and executed.
The German victory only postponed the eventual downfall of the
pro-Nazi regime. Six months later, the Red Army had overrun Axis
troops in Czechoslovakia. By December 1944 Romanian and Soviet
troops had driven German troops out of southern Slovakia in the
Battle of Budapest.
On January 19, 1945,
the Red Army took Bardejov
, Svidník
, Prešov
and Košice
in Eastern Slovakia. On March 3–5 they had
taken over northwest Slovakia.
On March 25 they entered Banská Bystrica and
on April 4 marched into Bratislava
.
Although the main military objectives were not achieved due to
improper timing of the uprising and discoordinate actions of Soviet
partisans that often undermined the plans and objectives of the
insurrectional Slovak army--if occurred later when preparations
were complete could theoretically have reverted the whole of
Slovakia to the allied side and allowed the Red Army to quickly
pass through Slovakia (though it is questionable whether the Soviet
leadership would have preferred such an option because this would
have significantly empowered the democratic forces in
Slovakia)--the guerrilla struggle bound significant German forces
that could otherwise have reinforced the
Wehrmacht on the eastern front lines against the
advancing
Ukrainian Fronts to the
north and south of Slovakia. Nevertheless, much of Slovakia was
left devastated by the Uprising and the German counter-offensive
and occupation.
References
See also
External links